Guidance

Tag goats with ear tags, pastern bands and boluses

When and how to identify your kids and goats with tags.

Applies to England

You must tag kids and goats correctly so that they can be identified. This is a legal requirement so that animals can be traced to help prevent and contain the outbreak of disease.

Your goats could be rejected if they’re not correctly tagged when they arrive at a market.

There’s other guidance for tagging:

In an emergency you can take a goat that’s not been tagged off your holding to visit a vet. But you must:

  • tag the goat as soon as it’s back on your holding
  • record the move to the vet in your holding register

Find out how to record movements on and off your holding.

What’s on a tag

A pair of adult tags display:

  • ‘UK’
  • ‘0’ if the tag is an EID (electronic identification) tag
  • the 6 digit flock mark of the holding where the goat is tagged
  • a 5 digit official identification number which is unique to the goat

Kid slaughter tags display ‘UK’ and the herd mark.

Slaughter tags have an EID chip in them, containing an official identification number for the animal. This tag can be read by an EID reader.

Find out how to get a herd mark.

Add your own information to ear tags and pastern bands

You can add management information (for example, the goat’s year of birth) to a tag. This information must be clearly separate so that it’s not confused with the goat’s official identification number.

You can also attach your own management tags to your goats, but they cannot:

  • be yellow, black or red
  • have the letters ‘UK’ on them

When to tag kids

You must tag kids on the holding where they were born, with either one slaughter tag or 2 adult tags:

  • within 6 months of birth, if you rear them indoors
  • within 9 months of birth, if you rear them outdoors
  • before you move them from the holding, if this is sooner

What to tag kids with

You can choose to use a slaughter tag if a kid is intended for slaughter before it’s 12 months old.

Slaughter tags can either be a:

  • yellow EID tag, which means it can be read with an electronic reader
  • visual (non-EID) ear tag, which can only be read by sight, rather than electronically

If you use 2 adult tags, one tag can be an EID tag. The other is a ‘visual’ tag which can only be read by sight, rather than electronically. Both tags will have the same official identification number.

How to tag kids intended for slaughter

You must tag a kid that’s intended for slaughter, with either one slaughter tag or 2 adult tags.

You must replace a kid’s slaughter tag with 2 adult tags if you’re going to keep it past 12 months old, whether you decide to slaughter it or not.

You must do this before the kid is 12 months old.

Find out how to replace a slaughter tag on kids you decide to keep past 12 months old.

How to tag kids not intended for slaughter and adult goats

You must use an approved combination of 2 tags for:

  • kids under 12 months if you know they’re not intended for slaughter
  • all goats intended to be kept over 12 months old
First tag Second tag
Yellow EID ear tag Ear tag (any colour except yellow, red or black)
Yellow EID ear tag Tattoo, which can go across both ears. It must have a UK code and herd mark on one ear, and the goat’s official identification number on the other ear
Yellow EID ear tag Green pastern band (any colour except yellow, red or black but only green is being supplied)
EID bolus (ingested by the goat) Black ear tag with ‘B’ printed on it
Ear tag (any colour except yellow, red or black) Ear tag (any colour except yellow, red or black)
Ear tag (any colour except yellow, red or black) Tattoo, which can go across both ears. It must have a UK code and herd mark on one ear, and the goat’s official identification number on the other ear
Ear tag (any colour except yellow, red or black) Green pastern band (any colour except yellow, red or black but only green is being supplied)

Other combinations of tags are legally allowed but some tags are not yet manufactured and supplied by approved tag suppliers.

If you’re not sure whether you’re going to send a kid for slaughter, tag the kid with 2 adult tags.

How to tag goats you’ve bought

When you buy adult goats, they will keep their original 2 tags.

You should not replace the tags fitted to the goat when you bought it unless they’re lost or damaged. This includes an unreadable transponder in an EID.

Replace lost or damaged ear tags or pastern bands

You must replace ear tags or pastern bands within 28 days of noticing that they’re lost or damaged.

You can choose to replace with either:

  • tags that have a new official identification number for the goat
  • a replica of the original tag which retains the goat’s original official identification number.

Find out how to replace lost or damaged ear tags or pastern bands.

Record tags in your holding register

You must update your holding register within 36 hours of tagging a goat.

Find out how to keep a holding register.

Where to buy ear tags, pastern bands and boluses

Buy official tags from ear tag suppliers approved by the Rural Payments Agency (RPA).

When ordering tags, you’ll need the county parish holding (CPH) number and herd mark for where you keep the animal.

For goats born on a holding with a temporary CPH or common land, give the herd mark of your permanent holding.

Updates to this page

Published 1 June 2014

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